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  • O Tata!

    O Tata!
    By Tamar Kevonian

    Asbarez
    Dec 4th, 2009


    The cluster of young women, dressed in their logo-ed shirts and black
    skirts look sleek and professional. They are here to promote a
    magazine. A few minutes before the floor manager is ready to open the
    house, they rush past the guests waiting in line and make their way
    towards the tables set up for them. Excitement is high. Over three
    thousand Armenians have made the 250 mile trip to Las Vegas, Nevada to
    hear the greatest Armenian pop star of today.

    The room, lit by candles and the wash of lights from the stage, is a
    sea of tables. Waiters, with glowing white napkins slung over their
    arms, stand at attention next to each table and face the doors. The
    women quickly prepare their wares and, mimicking the waiters, stand at
    their post in anticipation. All is ready.

    The guests begin to filter in through the doors and soon the room is
    full. Excited voices are drowned out by the music playing overhead.
    The women on duty, all in their twenties, smile at the guests hoping
    to be given the opportunity to tell them about their wonderful
    product, but alas, they are thwarted. Although the patrons look at the
    poster next to the table and glance at the beautifully arranged
    magazines, they quickly look away when eye contact is made.

    `Don't worry, this is going to be a better crowd,' one of them says,
    referring to the evening before when half the number of people
    attended the concert of yet another Armenian singer.

    `Yeah, this crowd is better dressed,' the other girl responds. `Last
    night they couldn't even speak English.' She says it jokingly but
    there is a truth in her statement and it is telling. A mere
    twenty-four hours before, with the same level of preparedness and
    enthusiasm, the women made the same presentation. As the evening wore
    on, their energy ebbed away and was replaced by frustration and
    disdain for the attendees.

    `I can't believe these people,' one of them exclaimed at the end of
    the evening the night before. `They walk right past us and ignore us.'

    `Especially the women.'

    `And the men come up with stupid excuses. Do they think we're stupid?'

    `To avoid buying the magazine, they tell us they don't speak English,
    in English!'

    `One guy even claimed to have dropped out of school in the fourth
    grade to avoid subscribing. But he kept telling other people that it
    was great and they should subscribe.' They all shook their heads in
    disbelief.

    `Tonight is a much more mixed crowd,' chimed in one of the women as a
    form of encouragement, `I see a lot of Barsgahyes
    (Persian-Armenians).'

    In contrast to attendees of the night before who were predominantly
    Hayastansti (those from Armenia), tonight's crowd was a more of a
    mixture of a variety of Diasporan Armenians. Although many were still
    from Armenia, there was a healthy representation of Armenians with
    roots from Iran or the Middle East.

    The next day, during the long drive home, the subject of the
    differences amongst the various Armenians became the topic of a lively
    discussion. The women themselves hail from the various corners of the
    Diaspora -Armenia, Europe, the Middle East and the United States.

    `Some people were so rude. One woman even turned her back to me while
    I was talking to her.'

    `Yeah, but some were really nice. One woman bought copies of the
    magazine for everyone on her table.'

    `The ones really interested were not Hayastansti,' observed one of the
    women and in fact, the majority of subscription sales were done by the
    Diasporan Armenians in the audience.

    `Growing up in Europe where there were so few Armenians, anytime an
    Armenian event took place, everyone flocked to it. And if anything
    Armenian was being sold, we all bought everything. I still do that
    today.'

    `Here it's almost like they don't care.'

    `I think Hayastansti's approach is that they are Armenian and don't
    have the need to prove it. While the rest of us, who were born and
    raised in the Diaspora and are children of Diasporans, always feel a
    need to define ourselves,' one of the women says. She is describing
    the collective feeling of being identified as an `other' in the
    countries in which Armenians have attempted to set down roots -
    starting in the Ottoman Empire, then onto the post Genocide Middle
    East and finally into Europe. `Armenians from Muslim countries are
    like that more than anyone else.'

    `Hayastansti's don't feel they need to participate in the structure of
    the community,' remarks one of the women. What she means is that
    organizations, that Hayastansti's shun, have sustained the community
    while instilling the spirit of being Armenian into the next
    generation. They established the foundation that makes the
    re-establishment into the newly adopted countries a much easier
    process for the new arrivals. Cities such as Glendale, California,
    with its predominantly Armenian population, allows for the luxury of
    conducting the daily business of living without uttering a single word
    of English.

    But like all great cities of the Diaspora, Glendale too shall pass and
    become a footnote in the long history of Armenians. All who took their
    ethnic identity for granted will find themselves in a new land
    creating a new community and hungrily seeking out all the things that
    reflect their culture while struggling to keep the next generation
    engaged in the Armenian issues of the day. This we know will happen.
    Just look at the current state of such historical cultural centers
    such as Tbilisi, Istanbul, Calcutta or Beirut where the community,
    culture, literature and art reached the apex of their relevance but
    within a couple of generations declined into the sparsely populated
    communities they are today.

    `They [Hayastansti's] will realize the importance of the Diasporan
    communities and what they have done in a couple of generations when
    their grandchildren no longer speak Armenian and have moved away from
    the community,' concludes one of the women and they all express their
    agreement.
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